'The only way to understand the Psalms is on your knees, the whole congregation praying the words of the Psalms with all its strength.'---Dietrich BonhoefferAt the time of his execution by the Nazis in 1945, Dietrich Bonhoeffer was not quite forty years old. Yet already, his influence as a theologian was felt not only in Germany, but throughout the world. His interactions with the Psalms reveal a passionate heart and brilliant mind grappling with the Bible's eternal truths and their application to human nature and temporal realities.Dietrich Bonhoeffer's Meditations on Psalms is vintage Bonhoeffer: eloquent, incisive, encouraging, challenging, inviting us to find in the Psalms both a path toward repose in God and a call to Christlike living and practical action as followers of the Lord Jesus.Also availableDietrich Bonhoeffer's Prison PoemsDietrich Bonhoeffer's Christmas Sermons
Works of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Protestant theologian of Germany, concern Christianity in the modern world; for his role in a plot to assassinate Adolf Hitler, people executed him.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer served as a Lutheran pastor. He, also a participant in the movement of Resistance against Nazism and a member, founded the confessing church. Members of the Abwehr, the military intelligence office planned his involvement, which resulted in his arrest in April 1943 and his subsequent hanging in April 1945 shortly before the end of the war. His secular view influenced very many people.
Once I settled into the unfamiliar cadence of Bonhoeffer's language, I gleaned so many hard-hitting insights from his sermons. Even though I was generations beyond the audience he addressed, I felt his passion for God and challenge to Christlikeness as though he had spoken it directly to me.
The collection of sermons included key points in Bonhoeffer's life; it helped me get to know him and appreciate all the more his stand for Christ at such a crucial time in history.
I'm so thankful to God for men like Bonhoeffer whose ideas and writings help the rest of us Christians get a firmer grasp on our own faith.
This is an ideal book for non-theologians like me: it's in-depth enough to stretch my mind, but short enough not to overwhelm. Plus, everyone can relate to the Psalms, and here Bonhoeffer enriches them and encourages us not just to read them as poetry but to pray them as prayers.
Awesome book. I'll admit Bonhoeffer's normally pretty intimidating for me to read, but this book was perfect. Deep in small doses. I was challenged and encouraged in so many ways by reading this book
Good intro to Bonhoeffer as one who has never read his material or has known much about his life. His meditations and poems are thought-provoking. My wife and I enjoyed reading them as our morning devotions.
The first half of this book features four sermons by Dietrich Bonhoeffer with Psalms as his scripture. I quiet appreciated and enjoyed those. The second half was much more fragmentary, pulled from letters and quotations of stanzas and lines of poetry Bonhoeffer wrote. It bugs me that his poetry was handled in such an excerpted manner since a poem cannot be fully appreciated unless it is whole. Since the same translator / editor has also done a book of Bonhoeffer's poetry, it struck me as a stingy approach due to a fuller treatment elsewhere. Aside from my subjective disappointments, this is a worthwhile look at how the Psalms specifically influenced the life of Dietrich Bonhoeffer--and an admirable life it is!
I set out listening to this with no knowledge of its context. I does seem a bit fragmentary, but this then seems about right as it had not been previously translated into English, plus the work is woven into Bonhoeffer's time in prison under the Nazis. I was expecting it to be a devotional work, which it certainly could be, just not in anything like a traditional work. Certainly knowing the capability of his captors/executioners, Bonhoeffer shares his vast insight into the Psalms to give comfort in dark times.
Short Review: Dietrich Bonhoeffer's Meditations on Psalms edited by Edwin Robertson--A collection of sermons, letters, devotional writing, etc on the psalms with helpful biographical introductions to Bonhoeffer and context on the sermon, letter, etc. I semi-devotionally read this over a couple weeks and we glad to read Bonhoeffer more directly.
Much like previous Bonhoeffer books, he has an excellent way of articulating his experiences through what he reads in the Bible. I did enjoy the journey through the Psalms along with his events in his life.
I do quite enjoy Bonhoeffer's writings, and this is edited well albeit briefly. Each chapter is quite short and gives a summary of the situation each reflection was written. A solid book, though not the best of Bonhoeffer
Totally loved this short book. DB had a love for the Psalms that rings loud from his days as a student to the moments before he was hung. This book has an editor that walks you through in short easy to read chapters at different stages of DB's life - off including one of his sermons on a Psalm. It is DB's struggle with Nazi journey and the Jewish atrocities that eventually land him in prison as he is implicated in a Hitler assassination attempt. This is what he says about the Psalms on page 147 right before the book ends: "There is not a single detail of the piety and the impiety of the Christian church that is not found in the Psalms and to study them is to make a strange journey of ups and downs, falling and rising, despair and exaltation, the experience of those who pray their way through the Psalms, on after the other."
There are other books available by Bonhoeffer about the Psalms, but this short volume demonstrates how his love and study of the Psalms permeated through all of his work. The editor’s background about each text was very helpful.
The greatest weakness with the collection, which seems to be a drawback of any introductory anthology, is that many of the passages aren’t really long enough to gain momentum. As a result, I found that many of my “take aways” are brief statements rather than deeper understanding of particular Psalms. This was especially the case with many of the “Losungens.”
Again, this is a good introductory text, but look elsewhere if you’re looking for something to really dig intoi
I knew very little about Bonhoeffer before this book--and am somewhat ashamed. What a hero he was, and how much knowing that influenced my awe of his writings.
Also, I truly didn't know that much about the background of the Psalms. I've read the book several times, but how different is reading something when you know little compared to when you know much.
I highly recommend reading this with a pen and pad at hand rather than listening via Audible as I did.
This book compiles letters, pamphlets, sermons and poetry that Bonhoeffer wrote about Psalms. Interwoven are background pieces of info about what was happening in his life when he wrote each piece. The background info was fascinating. I especially want to remember his identification with Moses at the end of his life as he realized he wouldn’t live to realize the end of the war. He dying words were poignant.
Dietric Bonhoeffer was a Lutheran Minister. He was also a member of the Abwehr. He was opposed to Hitler was involved in the plots to kill Hitler. He did not arrive easily at the decision to join the assassination plot. He was hanged just days before the Americans reached the location where he and others had been held. His writings on the psalms illustrate his feelings, hopes and fears during the rise of Naziism in Germany.
Good, but lacking depth. Seems to be a short work and is a good intro into Bonhoeffer, yet there is better biographical and spiritual material on him (or from him) available. Worth a read.
This book reads as both meditations and mini-biography. Each chapter features a psalm (sometimes more than one), a biographical sketch of where Bonhoeffer was in his life when he wrote the homily/meditation about the aforementioned psalm. Knowing the life events surrounding Bonhoeffer's writing was actually quite helpful in the reading of both the psalms and his thoughts.
Bonhoeffer (a progressive Lutheran minister who got involved in the plot to assassinate Hitler) does not shy away from being realistic about human suffering. His sadness over Germany's transformation under the Nazi's, his own conflicted feelings about being involved with the plans to murder another human being (even if it was Hitler), and his feelings of hopelessness while in a Nazi prison all come through clear in his readings of the psalms (a book of the Bible which is no stranger to cries of suffering, sadness, isolation, hopelessness, and injustice). Having read some of Bonhoeffer's famous "The Cost of Discipleship", I know how difficult the man's style can be. This book gave me bite-sized homilies and poems which were much easier to digest than "Discipleship."
Over the past 2 months, I have struggled greatly with hope and purpose. (I think this is reflected some in my review of Robinson's tremendous novel, "Home".) It was of some comfort to me to be able to read the words of a man who struggled to find meaning in desperate and hopeless situations. In truth, both the psalmist and Bonhoeffer write about deep sadness and feeling abandoned by God. And although the sources of the psalmist's and Bonhoeffer's sadness and my own are very different things, deep sadness is deep sadness. And in that deep sadness there are promises of hope. I can only pray that I find it and hold to it as well as Bonhoeffer did, even up to his execution.